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A random blog on random things. Think lightly, you have enough on your plate.

Video: Penguins announcer finds comedy in aviation fatalities

Greg Wyshynski | December 22, 2009

The Hobey Baker Award is given annually to the top male NCAA hockey player. Its namesake, Hobey Baker, was a star athlete between 1911-1914 before enlisting in the U.S. Air Force, where he was a pilot during World War I. Tragically, he died in a postwar plane crash in Toul, France in 1918, at age 26.

Funny stuff, right? At least it was to Pittsburgh Penguins announcer Paul Steigerwald of Fox Sports Pittsburgh, who cracked one of the most awkward on-air jokes in recent memory last night during their game against the New Jersey Devils.

For the video-less, a quick transcript:

Bob Errey: "The Hobey Baker winner went down, real hard. Our Subway sandwich of the game."

Paul Steigerwald: "Not as hard as Hobey Baker went down, though. He went down in a plane crash."

Then there’s some muttering and giggling; with Steigerwald apparently realizing that he wasn’t at the Friar’s Club, saying he wasn’t trying to make light of "how he left us," while asking Errey not to "start" as the laughing begins.

As Adam Gretz points out, Baker was actually killed 91 years to the day of Steigerwald’s comment. Who says he doesn’t have comedic timing?

Now, we’re nearing a century removed from the incident, so it’s not exactly "too soon" for this punchline. We were ready to excuse it, actually … until reader John Mozena hit us on Twitter with the following: "Hobey was friends w/ my grandfather, flew in WW1 together. I’m not a PC/sensitive guy but I thought it was classless."

OK, fair enough. This is getting enough play to the point where an on-air apology during the next Pens’ broadcast is likely.

Stick-tap to the Pens Experience for the story.

Brodeur clutches history, traps NHL shutout record at 104

Greg Wyshynski | December 22, 2009

Having witnessed dozens of Martin Brodeur’s(notes) NHL-record 104 career shutouts between the pipes for the New Jersey Devils, tonight’s history-making blanking of the Pittsburgh Penguins was a perfect representation.

The Devils played a devastatingly efficient road game in front of him, scoring four goals and making all the right little plays to disrupt their opponents’ attack. But just when you’re about to hand the credit to the Devils’ time-tested system, you see Brodeur with 35 saves on the night, having made more than a few difficult ones. You see a goalie who isn’t riding the coattails of his teammates but providing their backbone.

It’s the single most unappreciated aspect of the entire "Brodeur vs. the system" debate: That it takes an extraordinary talent to provide the foundation for that system to excel for, oh, 15 years. So while players and coaches and rules and eras have come and gone, Brodeur has been the constant in GM Lou Lamoriello’s franchise-defining philosophy of fundamental defensive play. If you think someone like Curtis Joseph(notes) could have backstopped 104 shutouts by simply being a Devils goalie, you’re either delusional or, more likely, a Rangers fan.

New Jersey’s 4-0 win over the Penguins was typically workmanlike, but every shutout has its defining moments. The ones for Shutout No. 104 came when Sidney Crosby(notes) rifled a shot off the right post with 1 minute, 42 seconds left in the third period; followed one minute later by Brodeur’s low glove save on Evgeni Malkin(notes), which he hoisted in the air with a flourish in a move his idol/contemporary Patrick Roy mastered.

Two of the best players in the world turned aside; one with a little luck, the other with faultless positioning. You need both to be a winning goalie, and Brodeur’s had them since 1994.

It was his 104th shutout, an NHL record. His 580th career win, an NHL record. His 1,032nd career game, an NHL record. Argue there are more talented goalies. Argue that his era defined him rather than Brodeur having defined an era. Argue that it’s all the trap or obstruction or Jacques Lemaire or Scotts Stevens and Niedermayer. What you can’t argue is Brodeur’s place in NHL history as goaltending royalty. Because this record cements it. The way generations heard Terry Sawchuk’s name, they’ll now hear Brodeur’s.

Coming up, some stunning numbers regarding Marty’s shutout record.

Great job by the NHL pulling together a stats pack about Brodeur’s legacy.

Here are Brodeur’s shutouts on a team-by-team basis; R.I.P. Winnipeg and the Whale:

So the San Jose Sharks, Nashville Predators and Edmonton Oilers escape his wrath, eh?

Here are Brodeur’s shutouts by the score:

That’s 21 shutouts by a score of 1-0 and 25 with the score 2-0. Most impressive.

Finally, Brodeur’s shutouts by month and by season:

So that’s 29 shutouts since the NHL changed its rules to make Brodeur less effective, including one year wiped out by injury.

Just another reason why his Hall of Fame plaque should be shaped like a trapezoid …

Is it the Penguins, Capitals, Devils and everyone else in East?

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

The New Jersey Devils face the Pittsburgh Penguins tonight for the third time this season, having won the previous two meetings by a combined score of 8-2. Of course, this should mean absolutely nothing for Devils fans, as regular-season dominance preceding postseason depression is pretty much the norm in New Jersey; like seeing "Bon Jovi" on the club marquee and finding out its Jon’s second-cousin Anthony playing RATT covers.

That said, tonight’s game is between two of the three teams absolutely dominating the Eastern Conference right now: The Devils (first overall with games in-hand, 51 points), the Penguins (second in the division and fourth seed, 51 points) and the Washington Capitals (second in the East, 50 points). They’re not just dominating the conference in the standings; they’re literally dominating the conference, with the three best intra-conference records in the NHL:

1. Devils: 23-6-0 against the East
2. Penguins: 20-6-0
3. Capitals: 17-6-5

Only the Nashville Predators (17-9-2) have at least 17 wins against their own conference. 

With 45 points in 34 games, the Buffalo Sabres are right with the Top 3 in the standings, although their conference record (15-10-3) isn’t as sterling. So if you place them a notch lower than the Devils, Penguins and Capitals … well, then the Sabres are in a mix of 11 teams vying for five playoff spots. Or as we call them, "Everyone not named Carolina."

The final five are going to be determined by four factors, in descending order of importance: Injuries, goaltending, trades and Olympic fatigue.

If Marian Gaborik(notes) becomes Mr. Glass again, the New York Rangers are toast. If the Atlanta Thrashers‘ goaltending can’t maintain its goals-against average (2.79) in case the fourth-best offense in the League (3.05 goals-for avg.) goes cold, they’ll drop. Will the New York Islanders add significant pieces at the deadline with a ridiculous amount of cap space?

Two questions: Of the teams in the parity-filled group behind The Big Three, which ones do you sense will make the cut?

Also: Do you see either the Devils, Capitals or Penguins falling back to the pack if they dodge significant injuries? Will the Olympics affect them?

For that first question: The vibe right now is that the Atlantic Division isn’t taking four to the playoffs again. The Northeast could, but more likely we’ll see three from that division, three from the Atlantic and two from the Southeast.

For that second question: All three teams have played through injuries, and all three teams are playing with high levels of confidence and clutch play. Depending on how they react to the Olympic break and against the West, we could see further separation from the pack in 2010.

Puck Headlines: Measuring true MVPs; Ovechkin beefcake

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

• For the readers who complain that our female-eye-candy-to-male-beefcake ratio is unbalanced, we give you Alex Ovechkin(notes) from the Russian publication "Tatler." The back tattoos … sheesh. More modeling on the AO blog. [Alex Ovetjkin via JP

• In case you were wondering: Normal week through Christmas Eve here at Puck Daddy, including Three Stars every night and our All-Decade packages on Tuesday and Thursday. There may be some sort of chat on Wednesday, but not our usual rumors one because of the roster freezes. Winter Classic float gallery on Tuesday; Christmas features our annual Puck Daddy tradition.

• Why the New York Rangers are a one-man team named "Marian Gaborik." Good stuff here, as Jeff Klein breaks down the percentage of team goals scored by an individual player. The Sidney Crosby(notes) numbers are eye-opening, both for his output and for the Pittsburgh Penguins‘ scoring depth. [Slap Shot]

• Previewing the New Jersey Devils/Pittsburgh Penguins showdown at Mellon tonight. [Fire & Ice]

• Now that a coach has been sacrificed and the Philadelphia Flyers are still playing awful hockey, GM Paul Holmgren’s lack of aggressive roster moves is criticized by one Philly columnist: "This team needs a shakeup. The players are waiting for it. With that vote of confidence, the Flyers had as much jump on Saturday – against a team with an almost identical record in the Rangers – as a car battery left in the snow." [Philly.com]

• The Florida Panthers remember what Mike Richards(notes) did to David Booth(notes) earlier this season. They’re in Philly tonight; Steve MacIntyre(notes) and Mike Duco(notes) are in the lineup. Old. Time. Hockey. [NBC Sports]

• The NHL continues its cutting edge upgrades of NHL.com with NHL VideoCenter, the League’s new streaming video player. Among the features: "Three new channels of content  NHL Shootout Channel featuring all NHL game shootouts in their entirety; NHL Press Room featuring live coverage of press conferences and other breaking news; and NHL Library, which gives fans a selection of classic and archived videos." Wait, a channel dedicated to shootout highlights? We thought that was ESPN …[NHL]

• The Dallas Stars place defenseman Mark Fistric(notes) on injured reserve with a head injury and recall defenseman Ivan Vishnevskiy(notes). [Stars]

• Pension Plan Puppets reveals Brian Burke’s diabolic plan to swipe the division from the Buffalo Sabres through Olympic fatigue. Insert evil cackling here. [PPP]

• Lambert covered the Matt Stajan(notes) "headshot" thing in What We Learned this morning, but the Toronto Maple Leafs forward had more to say about it after practice: "I think it should be the ref’s discretion whether it is intent for the head. I think that one could be argued both ways. Yes, he hit my head, but I am not going to sit here and say that was his intent. … But I know he was trying to hit me hard. I am kind of in the middle. You see hits like that all the time. At the end of the day I turned into him with my head down." [National Post and Globe & Mail]

• Your Three Stars for the last week (ending Dec. 20) in the NHL: Goaltender Cristobal Huet(notes) of the Chicago Blackhawks, goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury(notes) of the Pittsburgh Penguins and right wing Patric Hornqvist(notes) of the Nashville Predators. [NHL]

• How Dave Scatchard(notes) of the Nashville Predators has "been to hell and back," which is a really mean thing to say about Glendale. [NHL.com]

• Joerg Koch of AFP snaps this image: "Hundreds of people play ice hockey, ice skate or just walk on the frozen Nymphenburg canal in front of the Nymphenberg castle in the southern German city of Munich on December 20, 2009." Killer.

• The Falconer offers the latest in the Ilya Kovalchuk(notes) contract talks with the Atlanta Thrashers and discussed his value to the franchise. Is it down to Atlanta or the KHL? No entirely convinced of that. [Bird Watchers Anonymous]

• Great stuff from B.D. Gallof on the rumor that Charles Wang wants to sell the New York Islanders, in which he argues why the Isles won’t move and takes local media to task for eating up bad information. [Hockey Independent]

Jon Sim(notes) can draw a penalty. [Lighthouse Hockey]

• Malkin To The Kings reports the Edmonton Oilers are looking to move some pretty significant names, and David Staples believes him. [Cult of Hockey]

• Yeah, so the Barrie Colts are pretty sick: "The Colts, who haven’t lost in two months, are four games removed from matching a Canadian Hockey League record of 25 straight wins previously set by the Kitchener Rangers in 1983-84 and the Quebec league’s 1973-74 Sorel Eperviers, a now-defunct franchise." [Slam! Sports]

• George Malik on the quietly solid season for Todd Bertuzzi(notes) of the Detroit Red Wings. [Snapshots]

• Our pal Dany Heatley(notes) Speedwagon appeared on The 6th Sens podcast. [6th Sens]

• Finally, this team-up between Bloge Salming and Down Goes Brown is pretty much the greatest mega-powers moment since Hogan and Macho Man or, for argument’s sake, Godzilla and Jet Jaguar. Here’s the Toronto Maple Leafs’ Christmas party at Chuck-E-Cheese, filled with gun violence and hockey insight and a killer Phil Kessel(notes) joke.

More, please.

Podcast: Introducing Puck Tracks, featuring Belak on Metallica

Greg Wyshynski | December 21, 2009

One of the primary missions of Puck Daddy is the extraction of humanity and personality from NHL players; bringing to light facets of their lives that fans actually care about, instead of the usual fluff we see in video packages between periods on television.

To that end, we’re proud to finally introduce Puck Tracks, our first podcast, created and facilitated by audio producer Michael Raphael. It features players discussing the music that helps shape their lives and careers. It’s their soundtrack on the road or on the ice. It’s the music that fuels their competitive passion, or evokes bittersweet memories of childhood and family.

As usual, we’re aiming for a wide variety of players to feature. So the debut episode of Puck Tracks focuses on one of the true characters of the last 14 years: Tough guy and metal-head Wade Belak(notes), currently a winger for the Nashville Predators and formerly of the Colorado Avalanche, Calgary Flames, Toronto Maple Leafs and Florida Panthers.

Here’s Episode One of Puck Tracks. Follow @pucktracks on Twitter for news and updates on subsequent episodes of Season 1, which will continue in 2010.

Puck Tracks is the creation of audio producer Michael Raphael. He spends his days working in public radio, which has taken him to such illustrious hockey cities as Los Angeles, Minneapolis, and now back to his home base of NYC. Michael grew up a New Jersey Devils fan and still cherishes his early childhood photos with John MacLean, Joe Cirella, Jan Ludvig and Doug Sulliman.

This podcast, and other Puck Daddy audio projects, will eventually be available for download on iTunes and other locations. Thanks for listening; any suggestions for future subjects or podcasts, hit us at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com.

What We Learned: Headshot debate reaches hysterical levels

Ryan Lambert | December 21, 2009

 

Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it.

Oh boy, Christmas has come early for me again this year.

On Saturday night, Johnny Boychuk(notes) knocked the ever-living crap out of Matt Stajan(notes), on his 26th birthday no less and soooooo: It’s another hit legality debate! Yayyyyyy!

Stajan was obviously cut open, but he was stitched up and returned to the game within a few minutes. No harm, no foul … except on Alexei Ponikarovsky(notes), who picked up a penalty for roughing on the ensuing dust-up.

Obviously this play was like the Batsignal for all the clowns who (a) don’t understand hockey and (b) want this to become a gallant and honorable sport in which no one is ever put in a position where they could be injured.

So here comes the hilarious part, in which, thanks to of the amount of coverage this "headshots" debate has gotten this year, those that would have these hits outlawed and the offending players pilloried have now taken a new approach: Act like you don’t know what you think.

(Coming Up: Detroit’s done with the Hossa stuff; Tomas Fleischmann(notes) is as good as Alex Semin, while Ryan Kesler(notes) is no Geno Malkin; the Habs meet the Basterds; the Wild go shopping; and Alex Ovechkin(notes) adds another beauty to the highlight reel.)

"Is This the Type of Hit the NHL Should Be Eliminating?" screams the headline on Adam Gretz’s FanHouse post from Sunday morning. "Boychuk check on Stajan expected to be reviewed," says Mike Zeiserberg’s article for Sun Media.

The problem is, of course, that the League is unlikely to review the hit since no one was hurt, no penalties were assessed and there’s absolutely nothing to review. Both of these articles — which go so far out of their way to say that they of course do not advocate that hitting be taken out of the game so as to convince you that the idiotic things they say next aren’t that idiotic — would have you believe differently.

Zeiserberg’s article ever so generously concedes that Stajan had his head down and the hit wasn’t late. "After that, well, the jury is out."

Out on what, exactly? Boychuk’s elbow was down and only hit Stajan’s head because Stajan’s head, again, was down at elbow level. So what’s the problem? Was Boychuk supposed to let Stajan fly past him to create a 2-on-none situation for Tuukka Rask(notes)?

Well, Wilson and Stajan thought Boychuk might have left his feet (they’re wrong, of course), so there’s all the evidence you need that the League should investigate Boychuk for his obviously premeditated attack on poor, defenseless little Matty Stajan, who probably saw the hit coming but took it anyway to spring Phil Kessel(notes) in alone on Rask. Any contact Boychuk made with Stajan’s head is entirely Stajan’s fault.

The best part, though, is that because Gretz needed to reinforce an asinine point, he did what everyone who has an indefensible stance eventually does: Resort to alarmism and the use of worst-case scenarios to illustrate his weak point. To wit: "…And this past week’s bombshell that former player Reggie Fleming had suffered significant brain damage at the time of his death … is only going to keep that debate going full steam ahead."

See guys, we can’t let these hits be legal because Matt Stajan is going to DIE some day!

Kudos. That’s audacity.

But Gretz asks, "At the risk being called a ‘granola cruncher’ by Mike Milbury for ‘wussifying the game,’ is this the type of hit the NHL should be working to avoid?"

Yes, of course it is Adam. Clean, open-ice hits need to result in penalties, suspensions and hearings before an international tribunal. That makes sense.

Claude Julien had the best take on the matter in his postgame presser:

"We are going to have to be careful about making accusations to guys who make open ice hits. We are going to have to be careful how we look at those. If every open ice hit is going to (ignite controversy), we might as well play no contact hockey."

I get the feeling some people would be cool with that.

What We Learned

Anaheim Ducks: Jonas Hiller(notes) probably wishes the League would go back to making division opponents eight times a year since his numbers against Phoenix are, well, ridiculous. He’s 8-0-2 in his career against the Coyotes with a 1.67/.953 line in their last three games.

Atlanta Thrashers: Kari Lehtonen(notes) is actually skating again. This weekend was the first time he’d done so since having two back surgeries in the offseason.

Boston Bruins: Apart from the one big hit, Boston was just awful on Saturday in Toronto. Part of that was injuries (Andrew Ference(notes) played over 28 minutes!) but most of it was a regular garden-variety crap game.

Buffalo Sabres: Ryan Miller(notes) on Olympic expectations, Vezina nominations and generally being the best goalie on the planet right now: "C’mon," he said, last week, rolling his eyes. "It’s like, 25 games into the season."

Calgary Flames: Know who had a great game for the first time this month on Saturday? Jarome Iginla(notes). Know who didn’t have a great game? Everyone else.

Carolina Hurricanes: While Bryan Rodney getting re-assigned to Albany is pretty much only news by the strictest of definitions; that at least means it’s likely either Tim Gleason(notes) or Niclas Wallin(notes) are good to go against the Rangers tonight. It’s more likely to be Gleason, though, so that’s something.

Chicago Blackhawks: Patrick Kane(notes) was left to pick up equipment after practice on Saturday because he lost in the team’s practice shootout. If I were Danny Bylsma, I’d be drafting a lawsuit against the Blackhawks as we speak.

Colorado Avalanche: No one sentence I read this week has made me laugh more than Jibblescribbits saying, "The Avs recently took their yearly trip to the Children’s Hospital in order to torment some sick little kids."

Columbus Blue Jackets: The Blue Jackets’ new plan for who pulls goaltending duty on a given night? "You win and you’re in." No joke. So what happens if they keep losing? (By the way, good job Puck Rakers for dumping the "you have to register to read" policy from last week.)

Dallas Stars: Play of the game on Saturday wasn’t one of Karlis Skrastins’(notes) two goals, or some kind of big stop by Marty Turco(notes). It was, instead, a blocked shot by Brenden Morrow(notes) on the PK inside of a minute to go. What you choose to believe about a team whose best play was a blocked shot… On a lazy slashing penalty… That happened on the opposite end of the ice from its own goal… By your star player… While up a goal on Detroit… Inside of two minutes left… That’s up to you.

Detroit Red Wings: Sorry, everyone in Chicago, the Red Wings won’t indulge your "You guys hate Hossa, right?" questions.

Edmonton Oilers: The Oilers have, not surprisingly, been the Grinch to all Edmonton fans’ Christmas season. "Speaking of Deslauriers, he’s gone from sitting for months between starts last season to making 111 straight appearances with Nikolai Khabibulin(notes) waiting for Santa to deliver a new spine. Anybody have a plan?" Outstanding.

Florida Panthers: Well Detroit fans, looks like I almost owe you an apology: it’s actually Florida that has the worst fans in the league.

Los Angeles Kings: The Kings are about to sign Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds overage defenseman Jacob Muzzin, who had NHL scouts lined up around the block earlier this season. Great get for the Kings here.

Minnesota Wild: The best thing about all the Wild’s equipment burning up was that Nick Schultz(notes) went into a Play it Again Sports in Ottawa and bought a new set of shoulder pads. That rules.

Montreal Canadiens: Snow on the East Coast kept the Habs in Long Island a bit longer than they wanted. But they got to watch "Inglourious Basterds," which is my favorite movie of the year so far, so it wasn’t all bad.

Nashville Predators: After missing Saturday’s game against the Flames, Jason Arnott(notes) is still questionable for tomorrow’s game in Vancouver. If he doesn’t go then, he’s going to play on Boxing Day for sure.

New Jersey Devils: Rod Pelley(notes) scored Saturday. Kind of a big deal. It was his first NHL goal since Nov. 23, 2007. Another guy that scored in that game: Dean McAmmond(notes). Twice.

New York Islanders: Official attendance on the Island because of the snow: Just 6,000. And, as Chris Botta points out, more than half of them were supporting Les Habitants.

New York Rangers: Hey, Matt Gilroy(notes) got recalled in a hurry. I wonder who the slowest guy on the Hurricanes is, and if he’s going to blow Gilroy’s doors off en route to an overtime winner tonight. Oh, here’s some bad news: Wade Redden(notes) is probably going to play tonight. 

Ottawa Senators: Big 22-save performance by Brodeur in a 4-1 win by the.. Senators? Oh, Mike Brodeur(notes). Okay I get it now.

Philadelphia Flyers: "This is about making the playoffs. This is about the Philadelphia Flyers playing a brand of hockey that you can be proud of. And I don’t know how anyone could possibly be proud after the first, two periods. It’s completely unacceptable." Fun quiz: Which game is Peter Laviolette talking about?

Phoenix Coyotes: Watch out for Phoenix in the next few weeks. Three points out of a tie for first in the Pacific, which crazily puts it just seventh in the West, but has the benefit of playing six of its next seven games in Glendale. The Coyotes are 12-5-0 there this year.

Pittsburgh Penguins: Brooks Orpik(notes) is not cool with the NHL changing the names of its various trophies (nor should he be). Sid Crosby on the other hand? "I don’t think you can go wrong either way, to be honest with you. If they are to rename them, you’re talking about trophies being named after Mario and Gretzky. How can you argue with that? They are, arguably, the best players ever to play." Weak, Sid. Weak. He’d change his tune if his landlord wasn’t one of the guys that’d be on the new trophies.

San Jose Sharks: How many times has Jamie McGinn(notes) been recalled this season? A hundred? Isn’t THIS circumventing the salary cap (or at least operating in violation of its spirit) just as much as some stupidly long-term contract?

St. Louis Blues: Larry Pleau’s working the phones like an operator on the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon, but the Blues are probably not going to make a trade any time soon.

Tampa Bay Lightning: Lukas Krajicek(notes) is done with the Lightning for sure. Says GM Brian Lawton: He "won’t be on re-entry (waivers) under any circumstances." Cold-blooded.

Toronto Maple Leafs: Jonas Gustavsson(notes) wasn’t tested much by a punchless Bruins side, but a first NHL shutout is a first NHL shutout, isn’t it? Good work by the kid.

Vancouver Canucks: Know who the Vancouver media loves is Ryan Kesler. You can tell because they write sentences like this in reference to Kesler potentially being one of the best second-line centers in the league: "After Friday’s game, Sidney Crosby(notes) and Evgeni Malkin(notes) — easily hockey’s best one-two punch at centre — had combined for 77 points. Henrik Sedin(notes) and Kesler had 75." Of course Malkin missed six games and Crosby one. And Ryan Kesler also is not anywhere in the same stratosphere as either Crosby or Malkin. That too.

Washington Capitals: Would you believe Tomas Fleischmann has as many goals as Alex Semin? Because it’s true. And, unlike Ryan "Malkin" Kesler, he’s actually played fewer games than Semin.

Play of the Weekend

This is why Alex Ovechkin is Alex Ovechkin.

Great use of speed and ability to recognize opportunities, and then he buries a rebound that’s still sizzling from some ridiculous angle on his off wing. This kid’s okay.

Gold Star Award

Andrei Markov(notes) played his first game since Oct. 1 on Saturday. And scored twice. That’s pretty awesome. So awesome, in fact, that I will ignore that the goals came against the Islanders.

Minus of the Weekend

Brent Sutter, what are you doin’ to me, dogsie?

The Flames have lost three of their last four and have just three wins in December. Teams they’ve beaten: San Jose, Atlanta and Los Angeles. Teams to which they’ve lost: Phoenix, L.A., Minnesota (in OT), Colorado, St. Louis, Nashville. Showing up to play well even against the crap teams? That’d be nice.

Perfect HFBoards trade proposal of the week

There are a lot of ways you can win PHFBTPOTW (I gotta get a better acronym), and calling Lubomir Visnovsky(notes) a "world-class defender" sure is one of them. Well done to you, user "Smooth Skating!"

To EDM:

Andy Sutton(notes)

Brendan Witt(notes)

To NYI:

Shawn Horcoff(notes)

Lubomir Visnovsky

New york gets a world class defender in Visnovsky and a veteran center that can take take some of the pressure off the kids.

Signoff

Don’t call it that.

Ryan Lambert publishes hockey awesomeness pretty much every day over at The Two-Line Pass. Check it out, why don’t you? Or you can e-mail him here and follow him on Twitter if you so desire.

Friday’s Three Stars: Raymond leads Canucks comeback

Sean Leahy | December 19, 2009

No. 1 Star: Mason Raymond(notes), Vancouver Canucks

Raymond played the hero in Vancouver’s comeback victory over the Washington Capitals with two goals, including the winner with less than seven minutes to play in the third period. His goal late in the second period tied the game at two and his seventh power-play goal of the season was enough to get by the Capitals and put the Canucks one point behind Detroit for eighth in the Western Conference.

No. 2 Star: Jeff Halpern(notes), Tampa Bay Lightning

After being benched by head coach Rick Tocchet against Nashville earlier in the week, Halpern responded tonight with two goals, both in the third period, as the Lightning downed St. Louis 6-3. The veteran Halpern scored the eventual game-winner early in the third period before adding the insurance marker with just under nine minutes to play. The two-point night snaps a five-game pointless streak for Halpern.

No. 3 Star: Ryan Miller(notes), Buffalo Sabres

After getting no help from his offense in a 2-0 loss to Ottawa on Wednesday night, Miller and the Sabres rebounded with a decisive 5-2 win over Toronto. Continuing to make a play at the No. 1 starting job for the U.S. Olympic team, Miller stopped 40 Maple Leaf shots for his 20th win of the season and fourth win in five starts. 

Honorable mention: Congratulations are in order for Toronto Maple Leafs rookie forward Viktor Stalberg(notes), who scored his first career NHL goal against Ryan Miller and Vincent Lecavalier(notes) who, with two assists against St. Louis, hit the 700-point plateau for his career … Martin Brodeur(notes) passed Patrick Roy for the all-time games played record by taking part in his 1,030 NHL contest … Radek Dvorak(notes) and Rostislav Olesz(notes) scored goals 37-seconds apart in the third period and added two assists in Florida’s 6-3 win over the Carolina. Dvorak finished a plus-5 while Olesz was a plus-3. Jordon Leopold, who scored the opening goal for the Panthers, was a plus-4 … Steven Stamkos’(notes) goal early in the second period gave Tampa a 2-1 lead and his empty-net tally with 58 seconds to go sealed the deal against the Blues. Ryan Malone(notes) (two assists) and Martin St. Louis(notes) (goal, two assists) were both a plus-4 … Scoring the bookend goals of the game, David Krejci(notes) started the scoring and ended the regulation scoring in Chicago’s 5-4 shootout win over Boston. His goal with 2:43 to go in the third sent things to overtime before Jonathan Toews(notes) and Patrick Kane(notes) tallied in the shootout giving the Blackhawks the extra point. Chicago goaltender Antti Niemi(notes) wasn’t sharp, but didn’t allow a goal in the shootout to improve his record to 7-1-1 … Despite being knocked into the Canucks bench, Washington’s Brooks Laich(notes) earned a plus and an assist on Alex Semin’s goal in the first period:

Did you know?: Ottawa has now lost their last nine games against New Jersey dating back to October 2007. (AP)

Dishonorable mention: Senators defensemen Filip Kuba(notes) and rookie Erik Karlsson(notes) were both a minus-3 against the Devils. Karlsson has only been a plus-player in two out of his 20 games this season … Cam Ward(notes) was pulled before the third period after allowing five goals on 26 shots against Florida. Ward’s won just once in his last 15 starts … Vesa Toskala(notes) now has another blooper to replace Rob Davison’s 190-foot goal from almost two years ago. His poor handling of Toni Lydman’s(notes) shot in the second period against Buffalo opened the floodgates for the Sabres as they would score twice more in the following six minutes, giving them four for the period. Friday’s game was the fourth time in their last eight that the Maple Leafs have allowed five or more goals.

Puck Headlines: Bettman on Classic, contracts; Hitch in trouble?

Greg Wyshynski | December 17, 2009

Here are your Puck Headlines: A glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media.

• Rumors chat at 1 p.m. Trades of the Decade later today; stupid flight delays messed with our production schedule.

• Look, Evgeni Malkin(notes) knows you want to see Canada vs. Russia for the gold. But you ignore Sweden at your own peril. [Russia Today]

• Gary Bettman and the BOG talk about those pesky long-term contracts at their Pebble Beach meetings, with Bettman saying that it’s difficult to comment on an "ongoing investigation," adding: "When you get to the punch line and you know what the answer is, then there’s something to talk about." We applaud his use of "punch line" to underscore what a joke this investigation is. [ESPN]

• Bettman continues to charm the pants off the Canadians who loathe him, following his love for Southern Ontario and Quebec City as future NHL homes with the pledge of a second Winter Classic featuring Canadian teams. [Chen; full Q&A with Bettman here]

• New slogan for the St. Louis Blues: "Consistently Inconsistent." Is the Andy Murray watch on or off? [Frozen Note]

Philadelphia Flyers Coach Peter Laviolette has not asked Paul Holmgren for a trade to shake up the roster, but wouldn’t hesitate to do so if the team is still tanking under his regime. [Philly.com]

• Are younger players tuning out Columbus Blue Jackets coach Ken Hitchcock during their struggled? Better question: Are there actually Jackets fans who, as this story infers, want to strip Rick Nash(notes) of the ‘C’? Seriously? Either way, Hitch has the backing of management, as the "Hitchcock style of hockey is the Blue Jackets style of hockey." [Columbus Dispatch]

• The search committee for the new NHLPA executive director: Ryan Getzlaf(notes) (Anaheim Ducks), Jamie Langenbrunner(notes) (New Jersey Devils), Brian Rafalski(notes) (Detroit Red Wings), Brian Rolston(notes) (New Jersey Devils) and Mathieu Schneider(notes) (Vancouver Canucks). Good to see at least one player under 25 on that list. Lots of Americans, too. Interesting. [NHLPA]

• Craig MacTavish becomes the first man in the history of time to defend the hockey prowess of David Koci(notes). And yes, we’re including David Koci in that sample. [TSN, via Japers]

Mike Green(notes) will look to play in the Washington Capitals’ next game after that Koci hit. [Capitals Insider]

• If you’re a Los Angeles Kings forward, Michal Handzus(notes) is your best friend. [LA Kings Insider]

• Scathing take on Darcy Hordichuk(notes) of the Vancouver Canucks and why he’s basically worthless: "He’s a role player, and his role is supposed to be an enforcer. If he’s not enforcing we don’t need him. He’s not fighting, he’s not hitting, and we don’t need a floater." [Canucks Hockey Blog]

Jason Spezza(notes) is out of the lineup for the Ottawa Senators, but their cap crunch is going to prevent them from replacing him. [Sun Media]

• More chatter about Ice Edge bringing a Phoenix Coyotes AHL franchise to Thunder Bay. We had a back and forth with Jeff Marek from HNIC on Twitter this morning, and we’ll say this: If the Ice Edge group is putting the minor league team in Canada and urging fans in Saskatoon to convert to the Coyotes because they’ll see a handful of home games … well, good luck selling the Glendale locals that you’re something more than Canadian carpetbaggers.  [Slam Sports]

• The San Jose Sharks anticipate that they’ll probably open next season in "a Scandinavian country or western Europe" in the next wave of NHL international play. [Sharks]

• Advocating the return of The Wizard to the Blue Jackets. [The Cannon]

• From the desk of Yahoo! Sports’ own Matt Romig comes what is, perhaps, the worst bobblehead doll of all-time. That’s Jarome Iginla(notes)? Wow.

• Coolness: Video of Howie Morenz playing for the Montreal Canadiens in 1934. [Eyes On The Prize]

• Free Webcasts of WHL games later this month. Invite some friends over to watch the Everett Silvertips hosting the Tri-City Americans on your laptop. [WHL]

• The NAHL welcomes Dawson Creek to its ranks. Do they skate out to Paula Cole songs? [NAHL]

Chris Stewart(notes) is one sophomore who isn’t slumping this season, playing well for the Colorado Avalanche. [Mile High Hockey]

• Lede of the day: "There aren’t many Blackhawks who are as picky about their equipment as defenseman Brian Campbell(notes)." [Chicago Tribune]

Mark Stuart(notes) of the Boston Bruins suffered a broken sternum Monday night and will miss 4-6 weeks. Ouchy. [Bruins Blog]

• Cycle Like The Sedins puts together a list of hockey blogger feuds. There’s a better chance that Rick DiPietro(notes) plays the next three seasons healthy than that site failing to receive an email from a "HockeyBuzz.com" address in the next three days … [CLtS]

• Hockey Fights: You had us at Sergei Brylin(notes) vs. Chris Campoli(notes). [HockeyFights.com]

• The 10th image in this slideshow for the Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers is probably not a Pens fan telling Dan Carcillo he’s No. 1. [Tribune Review, NSFW; stick tap to Puck Buddy Emily]

• Finally, and staying with the Penguins and Flyers, this Pittsburgh fan’s inspired Max Talbot(notes) "shhhhhhh…" tribute may not actually be a Jersey Foul when used for game warm-up prop comedy. [Thanks to Puck Buddy Matt, who is actually the man with the sweater.]

Puck Previews: Brodeur to tie Roy; more Europe talk

Sean Leahy | December 16, 2009

Here are your Puck Previews: Spotlighting the key games in NHL action, news and views as well as general frivolity. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.

Preview: Montreal Canadiens at New Jersey Devils, 7 p.m. EST. It’s almost fitting that Martin Brodeur(notes) will tie Patrick Roy’s record for games played tonight against his boyhood team. Now, if he should post a shutout against the Habs tonight and break Terry Sawchuk’s all-time record, the fans at Prudential Center tonight would really get the most out of their tickets. Carey Price(notes) is expected in goal for Montreal as Jaroslav Halak(notes) continues to shy away from questions that he asked Canadiens GM for a trade earlier in the week.

Preview: New York Islanders at New York Rangers, 7 p.m. EST. After an inspiring overtime win against Boston on Saturday, the Islanders fell flat on their faces with a 7-1 stomping by Florida on Monday night. Now with a home-and-home with their hated rivals in the next two days, it’s an opportunity for Scott Gordon to get his team back on track. 

Preview: Buffalo Sabres at Ottawa Senators, 7:30 p.m. EST. Jason Spezza(notes) is now gone for 6-8 weeks with a torn MCL bringing the number of Ottawa regulars sidelined to five. The Sabres smell blood and enter the game with a four-game win streak and have won eight of their last 10 games. Buffalo will be looking for their first win in Ottawa since March of 2008.

Check out previews and updated scores for all of today’s games on the Y! Sports NHL scores and scheds page.

Evening Reading

-Sportsnet reported this morning that Columbus, Boston, Minnesota, Carolina, San Jose, and Phoenix will all start the 2010-11 season in Europe, but a Hurricanes team official said the process is not complete just yet.  [Canes Country]

-A second, Canadian-based Winter Classic could be upon us next season. [Fanhouse]

-Can Ty Conklin(notes) play defense? The Bruins announced that they will be without defenseman Mark Stuart(notes) for 4-6 weeks after he suffered a broken sternum Monday night against Philadelphia. [Boston Globe]

-Sharks radio play-by-play man Dan Rusanowsky asks questions in light of Montreal’s lineup error last week. Thanks to PD reader Dustin for sending this in [Sharks]

Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: Who doesn’t love a good movie reference around here? Helm’s Deep posed a question in today’s Winter Classic post:

"Didn’t the Rangers already play in Mystery Alaska? …No, I like the Central Park idea. NYR vs. WAS"

Bold Prediction: Martin Brodeur doesn’t shutout Montreal and Anaheim knocks off the Canucks.

Puck Treasures: Celebrating your Stanley Cup title in style

Sean Leahy | December 16, 2009

Puck Treasures looks to find those hidden hockey treasures from the past and give them their proper remembrance. Seen an interesting piece of hockey apparel? Send us an email at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com.

Merchandising is huge business in sports. From t-shirts to hats to jerseys, fans want to show off their support for their team in as many ways as they can. When it comes to championship merchandise, that’s when the wallets open up faster than a Dan Cloutier(notes) five-hole and bank accounts are dumped clean. Championships don’t happen often for most teams, so when your team wins one, you’ve got remember it in as many items as possible.

Stanley Cup merchandise has evolved over the years from simple t-shirt and hat designs to technological pieces of art that bring in millions of dollars per year for the NHL and its teams. It’s easy to see the evolution of championship merchandise by scouring eBay and that’s what we did to find some vintage Cup goodies. Come along for the journey won’t ye?

Thanks to stores like Lids and every single New York Yankee-loving rapper, hats have changed drastically over time and become more and more of an accessory for everyday fashion. Back in the late 1970’s, the Pittsburgh Pirates helped make the painter’s hat a cult-like fashion trend.

What consumers look for in a piece of merchandise that they want to plop their hard earned $25 for these days is something with a sleek look, good colors and more than 45 seconds of design work. Enter these two beauties:

Those mesh hats with the plain white front were much like the ones I sported during my Little League days. Obviously some designer in 1988 felt he could cash in by leaving off "Palumbo Liquors" or "Mangano Funeral Home" and instead promote the 1998 Cup final between the Boston Bruins and Edmonton Oilers.

On the right is a celebratory piece of New Jersey Devils history commemorating their second Stanley Cup title in 2000. Somehow this hat was approved by the NHL merchandise people as proven by the official hologram on
the brim. Whoever designed the hat must have been a soccer fan as the shield-shaped logo and two stars surrounding the Devils logo signifying their second championship is a dead giveaway for a follower of footy.

Cereal boxes were a popular form of memorabilia that fans would love to collect as well. Companies such as Wheaties and Kellogg’s would produce regional boxes that would fly off supermarket shelves and can still be found online today. (Is eating old cereal much like eating old baseball card gum?) Through well-placed connections, I was likely the only kid on Long Island
eating the Pittsburgh Penguins edition of Wheaties in 1991.

Finally, t-shirts are probably the most popular item of the Stanley Cup merchandising bunch. They’re simple, the players wear them on the ice during the celebrations and everyone loves t-shirts. Why else would some arenas be louder during the t-shirt toss than the entire game?

During the 1994 playoffs, trying to drum up some support for their first run at a Stanley Cup in their new city of Dallas, the Stars released these shirts hoping their fans would catch on to the wordplay used:

And yes, the eight stars were a necessity to get their point across.

Dallas would end up bailing out of the playoffs in the second round to Vancouver and not make it past the first round until 1998 when they began a three-year run that ended in two Finals appearances and one Cup.

That one Cup title gave us one of the great player caricature t-shirts to hit the market.

Big heads on little bodies! It’s like NHL 3 on 3 Arcade on a t-shirt!

The Stars shirt only shows 17 players from the team, but if you ever wondered what Guy Carbonneau, Ed Belfour(notes) or Sergei Zubov(notes) look like in caricature form, it’s all there.

Two years prior, the Philadelphia Flyers decided on the caricature look after they advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals and showed Dallas that you can fit more than 17 players on a t-shirt, even Pat Falloon!

While the Flyers were looking tough with their arms folded as they celebrated an Eastern Conference championship, the eventual Cup winners that year, the Detroit Red Wings, made their own caricature shirt with a very important edit.